Fans of Rainbow Rowell may already know her signature style: Her books will make you gasp with recognition, laugh along with the characters' hijinks and probably leak a tear or two as they figure themselves out.” — People
“Who can deny the absolute, dizzy pleasure of loving a novel so much that you cannot bear to put it down, that you want to do nothing but keep flipping pages, that you want to immerse yourself fully and not come up for air until you are finished. I read Slow Dance in just that way, breathless and weeping. There is no one better than Rainbow at creating flawed, deeply human people. I loved every page of Slow Dance, a book that is romantic to its core, and as funny and smart as its wonderful characters.”
— Emma Straub, New York Times bestselling author
“Rowell takes her time revealing the couple's origins as high-school besties, the conflicts they helped each other through as teens in working-class families and those they're dealing with now, the long period of silence between them, and the undeniable glimmers of their enduring mutual attraction. Their dance is sweet and sexy, and Rowell draws out the whole, simmering affair as she ping-pongs through her characters' past and present. . . . [Slow Dance is] sure to be a crowd-pleaser.” — Booklist (starred review)
“Deeply human, profoundly romantic. Rowell tackles the challenges of love lost and rediscovered with nuance and candor. She will break your heart and you’ll thank her for it.”
— Leigh Bardugo, New York Times bestselling author
“Rowell does longing like nobody’s business. She pits epic love against relatable, painful foibles. …Chapters that dip back in time play to Rowell’s strength writing the confused passions of teenagers and show just how long these two have been absolutely gone for each other. Readers will be desperate to see them work it out. A treat for fans of Rowell and of realistic romance.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“If you, like me, think thirty-somethings methodically working through their issues is very hot, Slow Dance is the book for you. The people in it feel like people you know or maybe even people you’ve been. Slow Dance is sexy, sweet, wise, and nostalgic – Jane Austen’s Persuasion for our times.” — Gabrielle Zevin, New York Times bestselling author of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
“A gorgeous book. Slow Dance by Rainbow Rowell is a beautiful, believable love story between two slightly broken people. It was so sweet, but never sentimental. I yearned for them to be happy, and I miss it now it’s over.” — International bestselling author Marian Keyes?
"Rich, real, and emotionally raw, this satisfying contemporary is sure to impress." — Publishers Weekly
“With tenderness and charm, Slow Dance describes what happens when someone finds their person, within a life and in a place where they'd rather not be, and how moving forward from calcified hurt is possible, given the brevity of life.” — Shelf Awareness
“Witty, insightful and uncompromising, Rainbow Rowell’s Slow Dance is an emotionally charged and beautifully real romance.” — BookPage
“Readers who enjoyed Landline and Eleanor & Park will be glad to return to Rowell’s unique storytelling style and lyrical prose... It’s guaranteed to make hearts flutter, likely while bringing tears to readers’ eyes.” — Library Journal
“Rowell pulls off this impossible premise with great charm, and her depictions of the couple’s sweet courtship and their later compromise-filled marriage are equally unsentimental and knowing.” — The New Yorker on Landline
“Rowell is talented enough to be uncategorizable. . . . Landline belongs to a genre of its very own.” — New York Times
"Her writing swings from profane to profound, but it’s always real and always raw.” — NPR on Eleanor & Park
“The funny, wised-up dialogue, the tumultuous, sweet, and sexy love story is grade-A Rowell . . . a book that readers will find almost impossible to put down.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review) on Carry On
“Perfectly mixing sweet romance with deliciously tart wit, Rowell’s literary debut is a complete charmer.” — Chicago Tribune on Attachments
04/01/2024
Bestselling YA author Rowell (Eleanor & Park) serves up a powerful and poignant tale of first love for adult romance readers. Growing up in underprivileged north Omaha, Neb., best friends Shiloh, Cary, and Mikey relied on each other—but Shiloh and Cary always had something more than friendship simmering between them. Shiloh asks Cary to be her first sexual experience shortly before he leaves for the Navy. Mike, too, leaves town, heading for New York City, where he becomes a sought-after artist. Only Shiloh is left behind. Fourteen years later, she’s still stuck in town, divorced, with two young children, and living with her mother. After Mikey moves back to Omaha and invites both her and Cary to his wedding, the old friends have a chance to start over—but will they take it? Rowell’s skillful plotting makes the path to the answer deeply affecting, illustrating how regret holds back her imperfect but appealing characters. Though readers may be irked by some of the obstacles Shiloh and Cary toss into their own paths, it’s still easy to root for these two to get a happy ending. Rich, real, and emotionally raw, this satisfying contemporary is sure to impress. Agent: Christopher Schelling, Selectric Artists. (July)
05/01/2024
Rowell makes a triumphant return to adult fiction with her latest, a sometimes-melancholy but ultimately uplifting women's fiction/contemporary romance crossover. The novel follows Shiloh and Cary, teenage best friends who drifted apart before they slam back into each other's lives at a friend's wedding years later. Shiloh, now divorced and with two small children, is living at home with her mother in a run-down Omaha neighborhood; Cary, now a grown man, is a naval officer. Both Shiloh and Cary are intensely relatable, though portions of the book may bring back uncomfortable memories of awkward teen years, and their courtship is simultaneously romantic and full of the practicalities of two people with established lives trying to become a family. Rowell uses a deft hand while building the story, moving seamlessly between past and present as she excavates those embarrassing high school years and uncovers the adults Shiloh and Cary grew into. Readers who enjoyed Landline and Eleanor & Park will be glad to return to Rowell's unique storytelling style and lyrical prose. VERDICT While this novel doesn't follow all the traditional romance beats, it's guaranteed to make hearts flutter, likely while bringing tears to readers' eyes.—Jenny Kobiela-Mondor
Listeners will savor this story of high school soulmates reuniting under less-than-ideal circumstances. Narrator Rebecca Lowman has a subtly elegant voice that allows the story to shine. Shiloh and Cary were best friends in high school who were secretly in love, but self-doubt and immaturity kept them apart. Eventually, they lost touch. Now 33 and divorced with two kids, Shiloh desperately hopes to see Cary at a mutual friend's wedding. Cary prays Shiloh attends the wedding. Telling the story from alternating perspectives, Lowman aptly portrays different characters with subtle vocal changes. Cary and Shiloh have relatable real-world obstacles to overcome. Lowman captures complicated emotions in her performance with her pacing and tone. A.M. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine
★ 2024-05-04
True love waits.
In high school, Cary, Shiloh, and Mikey were a tightknit trio of quirky kids. Cary and Shiloh loved each other deeply but could never admit it, even to themselves. When they reconnect in their 30s thanks to Mikey, lots of things have changed, and some have not. Cary is still in the Navy—his high school ROTC training and destiny to leave Omaha was something Shiloh hated in high school. He’s stationed in California and spends months at sea. Shiloh is still in Omaha. She has two wonderful children and a jerk of an ex-husband and hasn’t done anything with her life that she thought she would. Both of them are smart, clever, misanthropic, and stubborn. They are also, along with the omniscient narrative voice and tertiary characters, very funny. Rowell does longing like nobody’s business. She pits epic love against relatable, painful foibles. Cary and Shiloh want each other palpably, but they get hung up on little details, feel shame, project, overthink. They struggle mightily to believe they’re lovable. And they aren’t rolling in privilege, having many practical limitations besides her kids and his career: Shiloh has no family other than her mom and can’t afford to travel; Cary has a mother in poor health and a lot of family that can’t help. Just as the things that keep Shiloh and Cary apart are rooted in real-life problems, the things that might bring them together are quotidian and harder to accomplish than any grand gesture: Hope. Communication. Grief and trust. Chapters that dip back in time play to Rowell’s strength writing the confused passions of teenagers and show just how long these two have been absolutely gone for each other. Readers will be desperate to see them work it out.
A treat for fans of Rowell and of realistic romance.